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Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift and The History of Rasselas, Prince of
Abissinia by Samuel Johnson, seek to capture the nature of the ideal world as well as the
essence of human nature. Both works are satirical in temper, and take a rather grim look
at the human condition exists, as well as the attributes that compose it. Neither author is
praising human nature, rather both novels conclude similarly that the perfect world is
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return home fruitless, Gulliver gets back to England he is a state of complete
disillusionment, to the point that when his wife kiss him he faints from the sheer shock of
the act. He becomes completely alienated from his species. It is this loathing that Swift
thinks humans feel for one another. It is clear that Johnson is much more forgiving of
mankind’s short coming than is Swift, a infamous hater of people
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